Wind Turbines

Wind turbine technology is far more efficient, quiet, and sophisticated than similar technology just 10 years ago. Largely due to technological advancements, the cost of energy produced from wind turbines has fallen nearly 80% in the past two decades, making this renewable resource competitive with conventional sources of energy like coal and natural gas.

Small and Large Wind Systems

Small wind turbines are quite different from their larger cousins, each playing an important role to meet various energy demands.

Small scale wind turbines (also know as home or residential wind turbines) can either be connected to the utility grid or stand-alone as an "off-grid" application, normally providing electrical power for home, farm, school, or business applications. Small scale wind machines can have blade length between 3ft-30ft, with a 100ft tower, and can power between 1/4 to 6 average American homes (and even more if they are energy conscious). Small wind turbines require average annual wind speeds of at least 9 mph. according to the American Wind Energy Association, the US is the world leader in small-scale wind energy manufacturing markets.

Large scale wind turbines (also know as utility wind turbines) are normally tied directly into the utility grid and are used to provide electrical power for entire communities and municipalities. Each of these large, "utility-scale," wind turbines can have blade lengths up to 150ft and sit on a 200ft tower, and produce enough electricity for 500-600 average homes per year.

In general, small and large wind turbine systems share similar components: